and many studies analysing hospital disaster planning have been done throughout many regions within the last few years (Naser et al.2018; Cristian et al. 2018; Alruwaili et al
2019). Naser et al. (2018) considered that the majority of these investigations revealed that hospital disaster planning was either limited or inadequate. There is currently no standardized
inclusive
or dependable tool for measuring hospital readiness (Naser et al.
2018). As a result of this argument
the World Health Organization (WHO) developed a genuine standard tool for this aim that was extensive for all threats. Cristian (2018) said that the importance of hospitals in disaster response has risen significantly over the last two decades as the number of catastrophic events and environmental
technical
or terrorist-related disasters has increased. The design and preparation of hospitals must be adequate to cope with and heal from all kinds of catastrophes and emergencies (Cristian
2018).